k Edward Bernard.1892 Edward Barnard 18571923, US astronomer. Barnard came from a poor background and had little formal education. Despite this, he studied and taught astronomy at Vanderbilt University from 1883 to 1887, thereafter working at the Lick Observatory and, from 1895, at Yerkes Observatory. Barnard was a keen observer, detecting the first postGalilean satellite of Jupiter Almathea. In 1916 he detected a nearby red star with a proper motion of 10.3 arcseconds per year, the largest ever seen, now called Barnards Star. In later years he studied the dark nebulae in the sky, demonstrating that they were vast clouds of dust. Photographed at Lick Observatory in 1892. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Edward Bernard.  1892  Edward Barnard  1857 1923 , US astronomer. Barnard came from a poor background and had little formal education. Despite this, he studied and taught astronomy at Vanderbilt University from 1883 to 1887, thereafter working at the Lick Observatory and, from 1895, at Yerkes Observatory. Barnard was a keen observer, detecting the first post Galilean satellite of Jupiter  Almathea . In 1916 he detected a nearby red star with a proper motion of 10.3 arcseconds per year, the largest ever seen, now called Barnard s Star. In later years he studied the  dark nebulae  in the sky, demonstrating that they were vast clouds of dust. Photographed at Lick Observatory in 1892.
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Edward Bernard. (1892)

Edward Barnard (1857-1923), US astronomer. Barnard came from a poor background and had little formal education. Despite this, he studied and taught astronomy at Vanderbilt University from 1883 to 1887, thereafter working at the Lick Observatory and, from 1895, at Yerkes Observatory. Barnard was a keen observer, detecting the first post-Galilean satellite of Jupiter (Almathea). In 1916 he detected a nearby red star with a proper motion of 10.3 arcseconds per year, the largest ever seen, now called Barnard's Star. In later years he studied the 'dark nebulae' in the sky, demonstrating that they were vast clouds of dust. Photographed at Lick Observatory in 1892.

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10587143

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16-11-2010

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